Jurassic World 4 Is Happening, but Does Banking on Nostalgia Hurt the Franchise?

The Jurassic World franchise is returning, with an untitled Jurassic World 4 from director David Leitch now tentatively announced and set for a 2025 release date. This primes the movie to come out three years after Jurassic World Dominion seemingly ended the franchise that had begun nearly 30 years prior with Jurassic Park. That movie was a crescendo of nostalgia, but it’s for the best if that sort of scope for the franchise goes extinct.The second and third Jurassic World movies pulled a lot from previous films, including the cast of characters. This saw a noticeable drop-off in interest for the third film, which only barely hobbled past the $1 billion mark. If the new film is going to be successful and justify its own existence, it needs to shake things up and go beyond the well-worn path that the series has already trodden upon.Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom briefly brought back Ian Malcolm, with Jurassic World Dominion uniting the main protagonists of the Jurassic World series with Alan Grant, Ellie Sattler and Ian Malcolm. The latter were a major part of the movie’s advertisement, with the film pushing its sense of nostalgia for the old movies. While this certainly helped make the movies successful, it can definitely be argued that it ended up becoming a detriment to the finished product. While many found Dominion to be an improvement over its predecessor, the nostalgia was far from organic and ended up hampering the movie’s storytelling. This is perhaps the most obvious direction that the new Jurassic World movie needs to move away from.

The Jurassic World franchise is returning, with an untitled Jurassic World 4 from director David Leitch now tentatively announced and set for a 2025 release date. This primes the movie to come out three years after Jurassic World Dominion seemingly ended the franchise that had begun nearly 30 years prior with Jurassic Park. That movie was a crescendo of nostalgia, but it’s for the best if that sort of scope for the franchise goes extinct.

The second and third Jurassic World movies pulled a lot from previous films, including the cast of characters. This saw a noticeable drop-off in interest for the third film, which only barely hobbled past the $1 billion mark. If the new film is going to be successful and justify its own existence, it needs to shake things up and go beyond the well-worn path that the series has already trodden upon.

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom briefly brought back Ian Malcolm, with Jurassic World Dominion uniting the main protagonists of the Jurassic World series with Alan Grant, Ellie Sattler and Ian Malcolm. The latter were a major part of the movie’s advertisement, with the film pushing its sense of nostalgia for the old movies. While this certainly helped make the movies successful, it can definitely be argued that it ended up becoming a detriment to the finished product. While many found Dominion to be an improvement over its predecessor, the nostalgia was far from organic and ended up hampering the movie’s storytelling. This is perhaps the most obvious direction that the new Jurassic World movie needs to move away from.

#Jurassic #World #Happening #Banking #Nostalgia #Hurt #Franchise

Note:- (Not all news on the site expresses the point of view of the site, but we transmit this news automatically and translate it through programmatic technology on the site and not from a human editor. The content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.))